Risotto · Technique Over Tradition
The risotto I make every week. Arborio rice, white wine, Parmesan. This is what goes under the salmon, what I turn into mushroom risotto, what you make when you want something that works.
Risotto isn’t complicated. It just needs attention—but less than you think. Warm stock, occasional stirring, 20-25 minutes. The rice releases starch, the stock reduces, everything comes together. At the end, you beat in cold butter and Parmesan off the heat—that’s what makes it creamy.
Here’s what actually matters: toasting the rice properly, using enough liquid, and stopping before the rice is fully soft. Constant stirring is traditional, but it’s not what makes risotto creamy. The starch releases regardless. Stir enough to prevent sticking and burning, but you don’t need to stand over the pot the entire time.
Use a wide, shallow pan—not a tall pot. More surface area means better evaporation control and easier stirring when you do stir.

Risotto · Technique Over Tradition
Ingredients
Method
- Heat the Stock. Pour stock into a small saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer. Keep it warm on a back burner. Room temperature stock works fine for small batches—hot stock matters more when you're cooking large quantities. The key is not shocking the rice with ice-cold liquid.Sauté the Aromatics. Heat olive oil and 1 tablespoon butter in a wide, shallow sauté pan over medium heat. Add onion and cook until soft and translucent, about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add garlic and cook 30 seconds until fragrant.Toast the Rice. Add rice to the pan. Stir to coat every grain with fat. Cook, stirring frequently, until the rice is light golden brown and smells nutty, 3-5 minutes. This step is not optional. Properly toasted rice holds its shape during cooking and prevents mushy risotto. You want to see a light golden color on the grains.Deglaze with Wine. Pour in wine. Stir until completely absorbed, about 1-2 minutes. The alcohol cooks off and the wine concentrates.Here's where you have options:Traditional method: Add stock one ladle (about 1/2 cup) at a time, stirring frequently. Wait until each addition is mostly absorbed before adding the next. This takes about 20-25 minutes total. The advantage: you're less likely to add too much liquid, and you can control the texture precisely.Easier method: Add most of the stock at once (about 1 cup), stir once to distribute, then leave it alone for 8-10 minutes over medium heat. Come back when the liquid is mostly absorbed. Add remaining stock in smaller additions, stirring more frequently for the last 5-10 minutes. The advantage: less active cooking time, same creamy result.Either way works. The rice releases starch regardless of how often you stir. Stir enough to prevent the bottom from sticking and burning, but constant stirring is not required for creaminess.Start tasting after 18-20 minutes. The rice should be tender but still have a slight firmness in the very center—a hair crunchy. This is critical. Stop cooking when it's still slightly underdone. By the time you finish it with butter and cheese and get it to the table, it will be perfect al dente. If you cook it until it's tender in the pan, it'll be too soft by the time you eat it. This timing is the difference between good risotto and great risotto.The risotto should be loose and flow on the plate—not thick and gloppy. If it's too thick, add a splash more warm stock.Remove from heat immediately. Add remaining 1 tablespoon cold butter and the Parmesan. Beat vigorously with a wooden spoon for 30 seconds. This final emulsification—called mantecatura—creates the glossy, creamy texture. The cold butter and cheese emulsify with the starchy cooking liquid.Taste and season with salt and white pepper. The risotto should flow slowly when spooned onto a plate—the Italians call this "all'onda" (like a wave). Serve immediately in warmed bowls. Top with extra Parmesan.
Notes
- 1 cup rice = 3 cups stock + 1/2 cup wine
- 1.5 cups rice = 4.5 cups stock + 3/4 cup wine
- 2 cups rice = 6 cups stock + 1 cup wine
- Arborio: Most common, widely available, works great
- Carnaroli: Harder to find, holds shape better, preferred by many chefs
- Vialone Nano: More absorbent, takes more liquid, traditional in Venice
- Under pan-seared salmon or scallops
- As a base for braised short ribs or osso buco
- Mixed with sautéed mushrooms
- Mixed with roasted butternut squash and sage
- As a side for any braised meat
- On its own as a first course
- Mushroom Risotto: Sauté 8 oz sliced mushrooms separately, fold in at the end
- Lemon Risotto: Add zest of 1 lemon and juice with the butter at the end
- Saffron Risotto: Steep pinch of saffron in wine before adding
- Seafood Risotto: Cook shrimp/scallops separately, fold in at the end
- Asparagus Risotto: Blanch asparagus tips, fold in at the end
- Risotto is mushy: Rice wasn’t toasted long enough, or you overcooked it
- Risotto is crunchy: Undercooked—needs more liquid and time
- Risotto stuck to pan: Heat too high, or not enough stirring in the final stages
- Risotto is bland: Needs more salt, wine wasn’t fully absorbed, or stock is weak
- Risotto is too thick: Beat in warm stock 1/4 cup at a time
- Risotto is too thin: Simmer uncovered 2-3 more minutes to reduce
